Chance Encounters With Tania Pérez Córdova’s Art

Hyperallergic

Tania Pérez Córdova: Generalization at SculptureCenter spans a decade of the Mexican artist’s career. Her first solo institutional show in the United States, it illustrates Pérez Córdova’s interest in materiality, the gaze, the passage of time, negative space, and the shortfalls of discourse. Elegantly displayed across the spartan, industrial interior of SculptureCenter, the exhibition brings together sculptural bodies of work she is known for, such as large artificial leaves punctuated by delicate gold chains that recall glistening streams of rain, as well as new pieces made specifically for the show. The latter group includes an architectural intervention entitled “Name, Phone, Email, Postcode” (2023), a diaphanous veil made of anti-hail mesh (netting to protect crops) and industrially destroyed confidential documents draped across the gallery entrance. 

 

Activation and encounter are crucial to Pérez Córdova’s practice. “You, Me, Us, You, Them” (2022), for example, consists of a large, flat circle of marble. Subtle indentations in the surface hold individual, color contact lenses suspended in liquid. The work is activated by chance encounters with people in the space wearing matching-colored contacts, in a performative moment. Similarly, “Portrait of an Unknown Person Passing By” (2019), a ceramic vase decorated with a floral pattern, is in dialogue with a person wearing a dress with the same design, whom visitors may or may not notice. The participants in these activations are subtle and unannounced; viewers will see them only by chance. With these works, Pérez Córdova nods to the potential that objects and materials hold to stir a memory or spark a connection. 

 

The artist also explores negative space and time, often by employing the physical qualities of water. In “All Our Explanations” (2022), she sourced 3-D models of human heads from an anonymous online bank to create concrete molds. Each mold is filled with water and frozen daily so that the ice slowly melts down the plinth. Eventually, an empty cavern of the mind is revealed, symbolizing the many thought processes that take form in one’s head. 

 

Likewise, “A Speech of 5,200 Words” (2022) is inspired by a statistic the artist discovered that the average modern-day political speech spans 5,200 words. The work uses artificial saliva that drips out of one copper bucket into another over a duration determined by the length of time it takes to read 5,200 words to symbolize the process of disseminating ideas. The piece draws attention to the power of words, both individually and as part of larger messages. Each drop of water, like a word, contributes to the overall content of the bucket, but each one, in theory, has the power to overflow and therefore alter what is communicated.  

 

Poetic and subtle, Pérez Córdova’s work invites viewers to contemplate each material as it changes, or stays the same, over time. What memories are sparked or encounters occur is entirely up to chance. 

 

Tania Pérez Córdova: Generalization continues at SculptureCenter (44–19 Purves Street, Long Island City, Queens) through December 11. The exhibition was organized by Museo Tamayo, Mexico City, and curated by Humberto Moro, Deputy Director of Program, Dia Art Foundation.

October 31, 2023
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